Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1952 — Page 10

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PAGE 10 , Her Majesty Would Rather Fish Than

Queen Lilibe

By WILLIAM H. STONEMAN LONDON, Feb. 6 (CDN)—Princess Elizabeth; who became Queen Elizabeth II today with the death of her father, George VI, may well be known to posterity as “Elizabeth the Lucky.”

Fortune has smiled on the little| == Queen from the moment she came|perfectly and plays the piano very into the world, early in the morn-| well. ing of Apr. 21, 1926. Incessant visits to hundreds of Thoroughly - blue-blooded institutions in every part of the

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both sides of her family she is|United Kingdom have given her a - bred to the role of sovereigh “in|ield course in public affairs. \ do a country where ‘blood lines’ One of - her regular duties as (3 count, 1efr_presumtive was to read state yh

papers, meet politicians and public figures of all kinds from aldermen to prime ministers and discuss governmegptal matters with her father and his advisers. There is nothing to show that ! ) "ua*young woman has been pleasant ee Mental gris of pan iow and placid. has a good, searching mind. with§§ An #tmosphere of friendly in-|,, eye for details,” She has an-¥ timacy and close understanding ther great asset for any queen—> has always surrounded the King, |, first-class memory for names the Queen, ant their two daugh-,,.4 races, She has absorbed a ters, Elizabeth and her youngeriy.,.q education without much sister Margaret. (trouble. She has -always. called her father “Papa,” her mother '‘Mum-| my” and. she has always" been! Emotionally Elizabeth seems to Lilibet,” —her own babyhood ver- have the serenity of her mother, sion of Elizabeth, {Queen Elizabeth, a solid citizen Like Victoria, her great-great- who has never been known to be srandmother, she has enjoyed a upset by anything. ‘She is far rich, happy family life of heristeadiér_- ‘nervously and much he : own, . tougher physically than her . ; Bore an Heir (father, George VI.

The Duke of Edinburgh, her| If Elizabeth has ever been uphusband, is a handsome, virile, set at the thought. of being Queen 3 intelligent and democratic man she has never shown it outside the g who served with real distinction|family. That is partly. the result in the royal navy. during World |of heredity and partly the result War 1I.. : of the right training. Sy, Within less than a year of her| None of the race horses that marriage on Nov. 20, 1947, Eliza- Elizabeth likes so much to watch beth realized the greatest ambi- has ever been more carefully tion of any sovereign or futureitrained for a classic race than sovereign. : {Elizabeth has been. trained for On Nov. 14, 1948, she gave birth queendom,

Since Dec. 12, 1936, when her father became King, she has been | carefully trained and educated for her future life as a constitutional sovereign.

Her family life as a girl and

Solid Citizen

SLIM-WAISTED—Elizabeth stands about- 5 feet 2 in her stocking feet.

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in her ciothes and hats and simul- only 3 years old and she herself “away from maternal in- band, Lord Seymour, while still a to Prince Charles, a fine, husky [Elizabeth's life has been divided fiyence in this respect. girl, She was in the Tower, baby boy. A second child, Prin- between her personal duties and Jer mothexis constantly over- threatened with death, when she cess Anne, was born on Aug. 15, pleasures as an English lady and|gressed to the point of being was 21, four years before she be1950. her increasing duties as the heir qowdy, a distressing if typically came Queen. Elizabeth's maternal grand - presumptive. 5 feminine blemish on an otherwise Vict I mother, the Countess of Strath- Most of the time she has been gangible itizen. N ley more, had 11 children. Her pa-/in residence at Clarence House, a| miizabeth started out Nin the!’ Mary II who was cosovereign ternal grandmother, Queen Mary, fair-sized mansion beside the Mall, so me direction but has now begun with her husband William of { had six. Philip, her husband, is/300 yards from Buckingham/i, gress more simply, with 1688 Orange between 1689 and 1694, an only son but he is a descend- Palace. jewelry, Her husband has ex ant of the prolific King Christian] There she has run. the house, tremely good. taste and is prob- quarreled with her father James IX of ‘Denmark, the ‘father of{even to the point of consulting ,phly responsible. It is the fer. II Whom she and her husband law in Europe.” |the cook and arranging her_own yent prayer of her subjects’ that helped™to depose and then succeed Elizabeth has always enjoyed furniture and decorations. The Queen Elizabeth II will never g0 on the throne. good health. Small—but still two details have been handled by Lt. for the outlandish hats of her A fet \ tiri ’ who inches taller than her sister Mar- Gen. Sir Frederick A. M. “Boy” grandmother, Queen Mary quel, Teuiring Woman garet—the Queen stands about 5 Browning, former deputy com- : never made much impression on feet 2 inches in her stocking feet. mander of the First Airborne Chance to Be Happy history, she, toox suffered the tragedy of being childless. Her sister, Anne, wha_reigned

ia Miserable

cellent teeth, attractive dark blue Maurier, who has been controt-every chance of being the hap-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES =

gn As ‘El

SMALLER—Princess Margaret is two “inches shorfer than her sister.

was erable when she was a girl and taneotisly she has begun to tear ravaged by her stepmother’s hus- she made her own body Alberts death.

Sergeant..Facing. Call To Duty Leaps to Death

A 34-year-old reserve Army sergeant plungedato his death from the eighth floor of a Tulsa ‘hotel yesterday after being ordered “to active duty at Ft. Sill, Okla. 3

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WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6,

izabeth The Lucky’

~ 1952

gi Two Hoosiers

Die in Korea

| Two Hoosiers were listed as {killeq in action and two’ others {wounded in the latest casualty! {list released by the Department of Defense | KILLED IN ACTION | Pfe. Charles L. Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A. Clark, Pekin, Pvt. Robert ¥. C. Maenhout, {son of Mr. and Mrs. Remi“ F. |[Maenhout, Mishawaka. (Previous{ly reported missing.) WOUNDED | Sgt. Loren J. Knepp, son af Mr. (and Mrs, Willard F. Knepp, North | Liberty. Sgt. Arthur M. Stout, son of Mr, land Mrs. Archie M. Stout, Peru,

Four Small Children |

gE Die in Home Fire | TIMMINS, Ontario, Feb, 6 (UP) —Four small children were killed {last night and a fifth was burned critically when fire destroyed the flimsy, shack in which they lived. The children’s father was working at the time and the mother t lwas not at hope. An overheated stove pipe was blamed for the fire.

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His wife and two small chil-

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She has a fine complexion, ex-| Army and husband of Daphne du| Elizabeth begins her reign with eyes and golden brown -hair, ler and treasurer of Clarence pjest Queen jn English history. . for-12 years between 1702 and

which Shee yas Saxen: Ba legs Houses + England's Queens have not beef¥1714, was a quiet, tranquil wbman are not a chorus girl's but she has ‘Writes Own Letters distinguished by their personal happily married to a Danish a good: slim-waisted figure. -feontent me - prince and her reign was a bril-

"Buited to Her Job She has devoted donsiderable| Mary , who came to the throne liant one for England. But she time to personal and official cor-'yn 1553 and reigned for five trou- was a dull, obstinate person of Mentally and temperamentally respondence with the ald of herinaq vears. grew up under the small ability, She lost 21 chilElizabeth seems suited to her job. private secretary, Maj. Martinighaqaw of the fact that her dren without being able to raise Successions of teachers and!Charteris. She likes to write her ther. Catherine of Aragon, an heir to the throne. tutors, beginning with her mother own personal letters and handles j,.4 been divorced by Henrv VIIL Victoria's grandiose reign of who taught her to read, have the Queen's English well and which made Mary a technical 63 years, beginning in 1837 when given her the equivalent of a good easily. bastard. she was only 18, is a natural inEnglish university education. She] Aas her babies have grown older| She was separated from her spiration for Elizabeth. Viehas had long and.constant doses she has tried to spend more time mother in her girlhood, menaced !toria's marriage to her Cousin of constitutional history, geog- with them. A standing item on/by Anne Boleyn, and her reign Albert remains a classic among

raphy, economics and social af- her daily schedule is a one-hour/was marked by the martyrdom all royal marriages. fairs. visit with thém between 5:30 and/of 300 Protestants, burned at the Her mother made her life mis-| She is probably the first mem- 6:30 in the evening, an old cus-/stake. . | who has ever studied the Ameri- Prince Charles has lunch with her|the throne and was ill much of] can Revolution and the Civil War. now and ther. [the time. She died miserable and| } She speaks French just ‘about Her pleasures are those of an/childless. | Her greatest hobby is racing|liant years between 1558 and 1603; land she often’turns up at one of but her personal life was tragic, | SCIENCE DEVELOPS {the more obscure racecourses near|marred by a physical deformity| interests her. The classics are Her mother, Anne Boleyn, was A "WRIST-EAR"” (regular items on the royal sched- beheaded when Elizabeth I was | (ule, ever wh | ~ Elizabeth herself owns two flat h " " . | |racers which were given to her by| 'aPpens. Read Washington | HEARING AID {the Aga Khan, Astrakhan and t Marsa. A sleeplechaser named D tan oh the national SEERe, |Monaveen which she owned in Me 1 o Ray) op the local partnership = with, her mother Ot coon it Zhe Sunday Times, been released which is worn » Fond of Fishin 50 on the wrist hidden under the She also likes. to oS . polo ACCORDIONS *189 | BIS 05 V ew a sleeve of ;the coat, shirt or. .i.nés particularly when her i This tiny “Wrist-Ear” "Hear. [Elizabeth does not do much rid- 115 E. OHIO ing’any more and has only “rid- . ing ald, because of the way 1 den to hounds” once or twice in|=— nates many of the objections:the birds ‘but occasionally goes on i hard of hearing have against Shooting parties to watch the : conventional hearing devices Sport She has never liked games... You wear it on your wrist to ; “ 1) {girl her favorite personal sport D) gain advantages that not even was always swimming. 8 you SL start your head can give you! In| When she can get away to Scot-|’ Ly child's | generally does for a month or so fy : tat all directions, understand every-| Svery August, Elizabeth enjoys vf MIR] ILI Ee thing being said, and it arouses two of the pleasantest sports in id worn under the sleeve, salmon fishing. id Like most of her subjects-—and most other people in the world—

ber of the British royal family/tom among British noblewomen.| Mary was 37 when she ascended | SUvortisosent |English aristocrat. Elizabeth I reigned for 45 bril- | {London to watch a horse which and her inability to have children. | Calling for predictions of things A tiny electronic “ear” has broke a leg and had to be shot. ——————— blouse. husband Philip is playing. Is worn on the wrist eliml- per life. She doesn't like to shoot such as tennis very much. As aj $ \ | ow this manner . you can hear in land with. her husband, as she| ’ no curiosity because it is always the world: Deer stalking and TN £7 as IER iM: as . . . Elizabeth would rather fish than

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Auto, Wife Says And Wins Divorce

PASADENA, Cal, Feb. 6 (UP) —Mrs. Rita Barker, 26, won a divorce’ from her auto mechanic husband because he didn’t bathe often enough. : : Mrs. Barker explained to Judge Kurtz Kauffman yesterday that her husband, ‘James,- 28, “only! takes a bath about every three months.”

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Judge Kauffman granted her a divorce on cruelty.

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Inside By Ed S

ARE YOU You don't h what's inside, | at the top. I could tell pawing and he as if I hadn't Candy Store, | The honest Helm told an « at chocolates a ing ‘new, Choc fore Hector wg Mr. Helm chocolate, and is being passed neighbor, bec lates by: the hi No more w chocolates, ping squishy feeling won't be any r at picking a ¢ palate. Mr. He my eyes, It's |

THE SHAP what if inside patty, That swa top was smoott Then Mr, H palm was anot “string,” the d lates, in the = *Mint?” I a “The M indi flavored center is duplicated, t mark,” explain We started pulling out ch them. The

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CHOCOL of bonbons b reading the bi

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NEW YORI about 8:40 o’cl to the Winter the door—but i

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Just as IT w not coming ea surveyed me, A “Just a seco voice said. Then the dc a girl going u derrieres were “If you'd cc stage, there'd h doorman said.

I'D MISSED all, of the Phil the theater whe shows. I'd alw: from backstage and stood there the folds of the of the stage, 10 Phil Silvers bombardment Phil told his t him how to tell “I don't tell “No, but if Phil rushed when he was “change room,” “Hi, Shorty! me you were Cf I said I'd sta

PHIL trotte ing all the time

Ameri By Rober

NEW YORE a pretty song c high around th to are pulling Everybody see broke, or little The steady ing costs, ti stable income ‘taxes, seems to swer. The da splurge is p bales of loose apparent any seem to. be ¢ again, instead and the conscio tops any other topic... / I hear tell mecca of Mian lush self this rooms to let a ter what the at rough time. Th there, and comy

ONE OLD-1 of the show fol Beach, has bee and he reports fulness. People again—scrutiniz money but not to come by. An assortme bands who nev budget are begi snarl gently at The tendency F of mild despair line pilot summ making more dc he said. “But cash. . There ju it to do what I

THE ‘annou intent to conte loud and raucot Salle’s stateme claimed a shar] is greeted with consumers,” Mr —in fact, they peaks during | advance has b may mean Som parts his job wi to run for the hausfrau with a I have recer

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